3

Frequency and Vibration

We walked arm-in-arm westward, wandering without words until we found ourselves at the end of Pier 25, an extended dock reaching across the Hudson River. A bright moon illuminated a path on the water toward the north. We sat on a bench facing the Nantucket Lightship, a moored vessel designed to warn mariners of dangers along the shores. With her arm still looped through mine, Erica rested her head on my shoulder and picked up the thread of her story.

“I looked out my window,” she said softly, “and saw a crazy display of lights and movement on the street below. Firetrucks pulled halfway up the sidewalk. Firemen running quickly in different directions. Hoses crisscrossing the street. I watched all of it and think it must have been a solid minute before I realized the firetrucks were there for my building. But everything inside was still calm. I remember walking over to the front door of my apartment and opening it. There was a solid mass of white smoke just . . . sitting there. I couldn’t see more than a foot out the door.”

I leaned over to gauge her expression. “You must have been petrified.”

“I wasn’t. Not at first,” she told me. “My first thought was one of curiosity. Why isn’t the smoke coming into my apartment? Then, I saw little trails of white—just like those in my dream—circling around my ankles. It finally dawned on me. I had to get out.” She stopped suddenly, lifting her head off my shoulder. I glanced at her.

“If this is too painful . . . ” I said.

“No, I’m fine,” she answered, although I thought I caught a trace of hesitancy. “There’s actually a point to the story. Remember you asked me about the colors? Your colors?” She looked at me.

“I forgot all about them,” I told her. “Do you still . . . see them . . . around me?”

She scanned me for any hint of sarcasm. “I do,” she said finally.

I was going to press for details, but I sensed that she wanted to continue with her narrative. I remained silent.

“I figured if I ran out of the apartment, holding my breath, I could make it to the elevator, which I later learned is the very last thing anyone should do. So I ran. About halfway down the hall. But I couldn’t breathe, and I could hardly see anything. I was nowhere near the elevator. I remember fumbling around for the door that led to the stairwell and running down two flights—maybe three—and then I thought about my neighbors, this elderly couple with five cats, who might still be stuck in their apartment.”

It was a warm night, but I felt Erica’s body tremble, and she began to breathe more erratically. “I started back up the stairs, but then I panicked after a few steps,” she said. “There was white all around me. I couldn’t see. And the more I waved my arms to clear the smoke, the whiter it became. It felt like I was stirring the vapors and making them thicker. The smoke was . . . impenetrable.”

Erica’s voice became hoarse. She cleared her throat.

“I later learned that the firemen found me lying in the stairwell. I only remember waking up in the hospital, with my parents standing over me.” Erica looked at me. “You’re good at this,” she said.

“Good at what?”

“Drawing me out.”

I laughed, though my throat was dry. “I thought you were going to say that I was good at listening.”

“Are you?”

I thought about that. I was good at listening, but mainly listening for the flaw and editing out the rest. I resolved that I would hold my lawyerly tendencies in check that evening.

“My neighbors, the elderly couple, died. Along with all of their cats,” she said. I shuddered at this. “I didn’t know them well. We exchanged pleasantries. That’s about it. But still—I was stunned by the news. Something normal or . . . routine was gone from my life. I found out later that the fire had started when one of their cats knocked over an ashtray with a lit cigarette.”

Erica put her head back on my shoulder and continued to talk quietly. She remained in the hospital for a few days to receive treatment for smoke inhalation. Doctors placed a small scope down her airways and suctioned out secretions and debris. They prescribed inhalers and pain medication, and then, she recovered slowly, suffering for months with shortness of breath and persistent hoarseness. To this day, she still felt a dull rasp in her throat.

Beth Israel granted her an extended leave of absence, and while she was committed to her profession, she welcomed the break. As she regained strength, she began to take long, aimless walks across the length and breadth of Manhattan. She had no identified purpose, no grand design, but felt that she was searching for something all the same.

During these walks, she felt compelled to come to grips with the warning she received in her dream from her grandmother. She found it impossible to confine the event to a breathless coincidence, some meaningless, wonder-filled visitation to be placed on the shelf as a “sign.” The dream was too specific, the warning too clear, the timing too auspicious. “I accessed not just my grandmother but the realm where my grandmother resides. It’s not so much that she came to me, but more that I . . . summoned her, or maybe that I opened up a path, allowing her to appear. I did something but had no idea how or what . . .”

She found no easy answer to explain the dream, but the mystery revealed to her a growing conviction that the world held secrets, or perhaps not secrets, but rather knowledge available to us all, if we would only open our eyes, our hearts, our spirits.

As I listened, I became aware of a connection between the alternative nature of her commentary and an enveloping peace. If our discussion had tracked a more conventional course, I would have been plotting, preparing my words in anticipation of the next break in conversation. But I now discarded any such strategy and was content to allow her to continue.

“On one of my walks, I came across this bookstore near Chelsea. The Sacred Scroll,” she said. “The space was tiny but crammed with books and every imaginable instrument of the New Age. Bath salts, candles, flower essences, herbs, body soaps. The books covered chakras, healing, tarot readings, spiritual consciousness, secrets of the Kabbalah. I stopped wandering around the city and instead went to The Sacred Scroll. Every day. They had a small reading room and healing center above the main floor, and I spent hours there, reading books on universal energy and healing.”

I shifted uncomfortably but tried to do so discreetly. I didn’t want her to move her head.

She continued, “You know the electric car company, Tesla? Named after the scientist Nikola Tesla? I found an article of his from 1942, where he said, ‘If you want to find the secrets of the universe, think in terms of energy, frequency, and vibration.’ I loved that quote. And I found other materials there on the harnessing of energy to effect change, to improve lives, to heal. I started going to seminars, consulting healers, meditating. And little by little, I started to incorporate new techniques into my practice. I’m learning how to heal others in an alternative way, although I’m not really the healer; I’m more of a conduit, a channel through which healing energy flows.”

I stared ahead blankly.

“Am I losing you, Will?” she asked me, lifting her head to study my face.

I hesitated briefly. “I’d be lying if I told you I understood any of this,” I told her.

“You don’t need to understand,” she said. “Not now, anyway.”

I looked at her. “That sounds kind of ominous, like there’s going to be an exam later,” I said. “But if there’s an exam, you’ll be conducting it, right?”

“I imagine so,” she said.

“And we’ll need to schedule this examination soon, right? It just so happens I have some availability tonight.”

She laughed at that. “I . . . I have to get up very early tomorrow.”

“On a Saturday morning?”

“I have a patient who is . . . well, she’s somewhat desperate, and I do need to see her.”

I accepted that. “But you still haven’t explained the colors emanating from me,” I said.

“Next time,” she told me.

We stood up together, walked across West Side Highway, and hailed a cab on Greenwich Street. We were quiet until we reached her building in Union Square. As we faced each other in the lobby, I felt a thin wave of panic, convinced that Erica might fade back into the murk of the city, that my hopes would be banished to a bleak urban graveyard of promising but unrealized relationships.

“I want to see you again, and I want it to be fairly soon,” I said. “None of this exquisite timing where I figure out just the right interval before I call you. Tomorrow.”

“I can’t tomorrow,” she said.

I waited for the explanation, but none was forthcoming. “I can the next day though,” she added.

“So can I,” I replied.